arXiv:2309.13138 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Bootstrap Percolation, Connectivity, and Graph Distance
Hudson LaFayette, Rayan Ibrahim, Kevin McCall
Published 2023-09-22Version 1
Bootstrap Percolation is a process defined on a graph which begins with an initial set of infected vertices. In each subsequent round, an uninfected vertex becomes infected if it is adjacent to at least $r$ previously infected vertices. If an initially infected set of vertices, $A_0$, begins a process in which every vertex of the graph eventually becomes infected, then we say that $A_0$ percolates. In this paper we investigate bootstrap percolation as it relates to graph distance and connectivity. We find a sufficient condition for the existence of cardinality 2 percolating sets in diameter 2 graphs when $r = 2$. We also investigate connections between connectivity and bootstrap percolation and lower and upper bounds on the number of rounds to percolation in terms of invariants related to graph distance.